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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Southeast Asia Political Geography > Indonesia
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Indonesia, Southeast Asia Political Geography

Related Category: Southeast Asia Political Geography

Indonesia[in´´dunE´zhu] Pronunciation Key - Economy

Crude oil and natural gas are Indonesia's most valuable natural resources and its major source of export revenue. Nearly all of the country's oil and gas deposits are located on Sumatra. Agriculture accounts for about 16% of the GDP and employs over 40% of the labor force. Indonesia is one of the world's major rubber producers; other plantation crops include sugarcane, coffee, tea, tobacco, palm oil, cinchona, cloves, cocoa, sisal, coconuts, and spices. Despite plantation cultivation, Indonesia has a wide landholding base; the majority of the people are largely self-sufficient in food. Rice is the major crop; cassava, corn, yams, soybeans, peanuts, and fruit are also grown. Horses and cattle are raised on some of the Lesser Sunda Islands. Fish are abundant, both in the ocean and in inland ponds.

In natural-resource potential, Indonesia is one of the wealthiest countries in the world. It has great timberlands; vast rain forests of giant trees (among the world's tallest) cover the mountain slopes, and teak, sandalwood, ironwood, camphor, and ebony are cut. Palm, rattan, and bamboo abound, and a great variety of forest products is produced. Indonesia is a major exporter of timber, accounting for nearly half of the world's tropical hardwood trade. However, the rapid deforestation of Indonesia's hardwoods, mainly due to its expanding population and growing timber-related industries, has caused concern among international environmental groups and sparked ethnic conflict (particularly between immigrants and native Dyaks on Borneo).

Tin, bauxite, nickel, coal, manganese, copper, gold, and silver are mined, and salt is available in large quantities from shallow enclosed seashore lagoons. Iron and uranium are believed to exist in quantity but have not yet been exploited. Primarily a supplier of raw materials, the country began to industrialize and developed rapidly in the 1990s. The industrial sector includes the manufacture of textiles, cement, chemical fertilizers, electronics, rubber tires, and clothing and shoes (much of them for the U.S. market), as well as food, mineral, and wood processing. The government has also promoted tourism, and Bali is a popular tourist destination. Indonesia has attracted increased foreign investment in recent years, but corruption is widespread. Labor unrest has been a persistent problem due to the tensions between the predominantly ethnic Chinese business owners and a workforce made up almost entirely of ethnic Malays. The country's economy was severely impacted by the 1997–98 Asian financial crisis and it continues to experience high unemployment and inflation, although the nation began to rebound in 2000. Indonesia's main trading partners are Japan, the United States, Singapore, and South Korea.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Ambon
Bali
Bandung
Borneo
Borobudur
East Timor
Flores, island, Indonesia
Halmahera
Jakarta
Java
Lombok
Medan, city, Indonesia
Megawati Sukarnoputri
Melaka
Moluccas
Netherlands
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Sir Thomas Stamford Bingley Raffles
Riau Archipelago
Seram
Suharto
Sukarno
Sulawesi
Sumatra
Sumba
Sunda Islands
Surabaya
Tanzania
Timor
Abdurrahman Wahid
Yogyakarta

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